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Title:
Miss Mapp
Series: Mapp & Lucia #2
Authors:
E.F. Benson
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre:
Humorous Fiction
Pages: 312
Words:
90K
Synopsis: |
From Wikipedia.org
Miss Elizabeth Mapp presides over the High Street of the seaside town of Tilling, keeping tabs on all of the gossip, and directing social activity. She competes in bitter rivalry with a neighbor, Godiva Plaistow, over dress-making, and observes the battles over golf and alcohol between Captain Richard Puffin and Major Benjamin Flint. There are further social wars over daylight saving time, bridge games, and the significance of a neighbor being recognised as a Member of the Order of the British Empire.
My Thoughts: |
This felt very similar to Queen Lucia, in that a domineering and unsympathetic woman is the lead character and yet manages to amuse us, the readers, instead of making us rise in revolt and guillotine all such monstrosities.
While Mapp doesn't have the airs of Lucia, she has that rock solid indomitableness of someone sure of their own rightness and superiority to every other person present.
In this story, Lucia isn't present and the town is a different one altogether. I'm not sure how Mapp & Lucia will come together and even when/if they do, I am not sure how that will go. They'll either be the greatest of friends presenting a united front against all others, or it will be a dynamite of a meeting with everyone else getting blown up by the meeting of the two titans.
I think the reason I am enjoying these is because the drama is so lowkey and absolutely meaningless to anyone outside of the town. It truly is a tempest in a teacup. I am not invested in who throws the best tea parties or who wears what dress, but I like seeing how people react to such things, because I know I react to such small things in my own life. If there is no drama in our lives, we will create it out of wholeclothe and bemoan it all at the same time. It's amusing.
Also, keeping things around 300pages is just optimal in my opinion. An occasional big book is ok. Dickens for instance gets a pass. But not every author and not every time. Benson knows this and writes accordingly. I highly approve of his restraint and mastery.
★★★✬☆
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